Newhalem Baseball Teams
By Nez Nesmith
Lyman is one of the few small towns one would pass through when taking Highway 20 east to
cross the Cascade Mountains. Highway 20 is mostly a two-lane east-west highway that crosses
the whole state of Washington from the Idaho border to the town of Anacortes at the Salish
Sea water’s edge in Skagit County. It’s also called North Cascades Highway, as it is the most
northern highway in Washington that you can go across the Cascade mountains over into
Eastern Washington. And from November through April Highway 20 is closed through the
mountains. Too much snow. Of course, it remains open on both sides of the Cascades, so
there’s just about an 80 mile stretch that’s closed.
When I was a kid in the 1950’s Highway 20 didn’t go all the way across the mountains. It
stopped at Newhalem, about 45 miles east and north of Lyman. Newhalem was the end of the
road, and in the mountains. It was and still is a company town owned by Seattle Light and
Power. The town was built for the workers on the Diablo and Ross Dams projects on the Upper
Skagit River. (It’s still the last place to buy anything if you’re going across the mountains to
Eastern Washington.) Newhalem totaled about 400 people, employees and their families back
then. Much less now.
Newhalem had no schools. A town of 400 people with a lot of kids and no schools. And it’s
actually in Whatcom County, but there is no access from Whatcom County to that mountainous
region. You had then and still have to go through Lyman, Hamilton, Concrete, Rockport and
Marblemount, all in Skagit County. Neither did Rockport or Marblemount. Kids from those
towns and Newhalem were all bussed to the town of Concrete, population 705, in Skagit
County. The Seattle Light and Power Company paid the Concrete Schools for the Newhalem
students and provided their school bus and its driver. It was about an hour and a half each way
from Newhalem to Concrete. Can you imagine? Five days a week. That’s fifteen hours each
week spent on a school bus. I guess you shouldn’t have had any homework left to do by the
time you got home. (I wondered what the bus driver did while the kids were in school.)
Although Newhalem didn’t have schools, it did have a nice park with a baseball diamond and
baseball players. Boy, did they have the ballplayers. They always had really good Little League
and Babe Ruth teams. Whenever our team from Lyman, then coached by Mr. Shirley Allen,
played at Newhalem it was an all-day affair, over two hours each direction on Highway 20.
Newhalemites were very friendly people. They didn’t get many visitors. And there was no
restaurant. So, the townspeople rolled out the red carpet for us and fed us. Picnic tables near
the ballfield were crowded with homemade dishes of food, every kind we could think of. Since
it was such a long drive we usually played a double-header. We ate between games. We were
thrilled to win one game against them. They typically easily won both, even when they made
the trip down river to play in Hamilton or Lyman. Those trips were pretty much all-day for them
too, and usually double-headers. Newhalem teams were always exceptionally good.
But here’s the rub. At Marblemount Highway 20 turns north still following the Skagit River and
as mentioned earlier, that puts the town of Newhalem in Whatcom County, by just a couple of
miles. And because of that two miles Newhalem baseball teams weren’t eligible to compete in
Skagit County for Little League or Babe Ruth championships. They were relegated to Whatcom
County which meant they had to compete with teams from Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden,
Deming and Sumas, which were in the western part of that county. To play any of those teams
would have meant at least a 200 mile roundtrip drive, and that just wasn’t feasible. Thus, they
never played any Whatcom County teams. The Skagit teams even petitioned the two baseball
commissions, Skagit and Whatcom, on their behalf and were denied. So Newhalem could only
play the upriver Skagit County teams in the regular season without being in the playoffs, which
I’m sure they would have dominated regularly.
Even though they knew they were not eligible to win a championship, they still put their best
players on the field and played their hearts out. Every other team admired and respected them.
Coaches, too, especially Coach Allen. He and another coach initiated the petitions. I always
thought Newhalem got cheated just because they were in Whatcom County. Why wouldn’t the
Little League and Babe Ruth commissions have made some sort of exception/concession for
them? I’m sure there were times when they were good enough to have maybe won a State
Championship and competed for the Little League World Series. The last season I played against
them in Little League their team went undefeated. Never lost a game but there was no trophy
for them. They were the best team in the area by far, yet another team was awarded the
championship trophy.
But, you know, I never really knew how they felt about it.
I hope those Newhalem ballplayers went on to college and got to enjoy championship play! I really enjoyed the geography of the story. I have been to Anacortes when I spent a week in the San Juans. Gorgeous country.
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